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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-10-05, Page 32I, 7,1 GcDER,ICESIGNAGSTAR, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5,1983 -PAGE 5A A&P resew the right to limit quantities to normal family requirements. All A&P Stares, viii be closed Thanksgiving, gayyM onday, October 10th. PARTLY SKIMMED Fresh 2% Milk 4 LITRE BAG SAVE .67/kg-.3.0 Ib Prices effective thru Sat., October 8th, 1983 70 lb CANADA GRADE 'A', FROZEN, EVISCERATE® MAPLE LEAF MIRACLE BASTE OR SWIFT PRE ONE P MAPLE y A&P SELF-BASTING,EPED ALl AVAILABLE SIZES -NO PREMIUM DEEP -BASTED CONFUSION AT A&P! II Turkeys SWIFT PREMIUM, SMOKED, COOKED WHOLE Fully Skinned Swift Hams SAVE 1.10/kg-.50 Ib CUT FORM CANADA GRADE "A" BEEF OUTSIDE CUT, EYE REMOVED with supermarket prices 14 to 19 pounds average limit 2 per Emily with minimums OUR REGULAR PRICE030.72/khat excluding this item OCEAN SPRAY WHOLE OR JELLY 9 69 Ib Cranberry Sauce OUR REGULAR PRICE 1.65 len ■ Shank Quarters NO CENTRE SLICES REMOVED Shank or Butt Halves SAVE 1.10/kg-.50 Ib BONELESS RUMP INSIDE CUT ROUND OR SIRLOIN TIP 395 /179 Ikg Ib 373g /169 IkIb 39 Ib SAVE .138/kg-.40 Ib COMBO PACK: 2 RIB ENDS, 2 LOIN ENDS, 4 CENTRE CUT CHOPS Round Roast Boneless Roasts Loin Pork Chops 5!2 93/269 4"/ OUR REGULAR PRICE 6.591kg-2.99 Ib OUR REGULAR PRICE 7.03/kg-3.19 Ib MAPLE LEAF COIL Polish Sausage MAPLE LEAF, REGULAR, GARLIC OR THICK Sliced Bologna FRESH, LEAN Ground Beef INSIDE CUT 6.591kg-2.99 lb Round Steak Full Slice TENDERIZED Cube Steak J� 39 /199 `t Ikg Ib 627kg Ib /289 ! 61,?/2911!9 I SCHNEIDER'S, READY TO SERVE, VAC PAC 80 9 Olde -Fashioned Hams 8 Ikg /3 9Ib SWIFT PREMIUM, READY TO SERVE, HALVES 15 79 Sugar Plum Hams 61kg/2 Ib SWIrT PREMIUM, READY TO SERVE. QUARTERS BONELESS 59 99 Sugar Plum Hams 61kg/2 Ib MAPLE LEAF PURE PORK, SLICE & FRY Sausage Meat MAPLE LEAF 6 ASSORTED VARIETIES INCL Golden Ery Sausages MAPLE LEAF Wieners 500 g 129 roll 500 g 229 pkg 454 g 159 pkg A&P OR MAPLE LEAF SLICED, REGULAR, THICK OR HINT OF 500 g vac pac Side Bacon LONG GRAIN & WILD 170 g OR BROWN & WILD MAPLE LEAF SLICED, 6 VARIETIES Cooked Meats 373Ikg Ib /169 375g .79 vac pac 3759 179 vac pac MAPLE LEAF, BRISKETS, VAC PAC Corned Beef 549/2 MAPLE LFAF Ham Steaks BURNS, SWEET PICKLED, VAC PAC Cottage Rolls BURNS PRIDE OF CANADA, SLICED Cooked Ham BREAKFAST Burns Sausages BURNS PRIDE OF CANADA Back Bacon SHOPSY-COLE SLAW OR Potato Salad PURE GRAPE JAM OR 175g179 vac pac 395 fkg/179 lb 175g 139 vac pac 35k1 /159 Ig Ib 10t/46! 500 g 139 ctn Uncle Ben's Rice 1pkg 1.49 Welch's Jelly 57arnL 1.69 UNCLE BEN'S. ASST VAR INCL NEW WHOLE WHEAT & WILD RICE Stuff'N Such 1p 9 ■99 DETERGENT -SUPER BUY! Palmolive Liquid pl litre 3 59 pls4 btl ■ WESTON CRACKERS Stoned Wheat Thins OUR REGULAR PRICE 5.05Ikg-2.29 Ib B 073_T0_31/2 LB TENDERLOIN PORTION PRIoroin Roasts 417/189 / ROAST OR CHOPS Centre Cut Pork Loin 511,g1 /25! 39 /199 Ikg Ib PORK LOIN RIB PORTION, COUNTRY STYLE Spare Ribs the OeIiS10shp COUNTRY KITCHEN Maple Leaf ��I�99 Dell Ham Ib MAPLE LEAF REGULAR & PEPPERCORN Salami 11008■414/199 MAPLE LEAF COIL Polish Sausage (100 8 •37/169 3 7 /169 MAPLE LEAF BRICK FARMER COLBY OR // MO77ARE`319 Ib es Assorted Chees■70 1100 g MINI PUDDINGS OR YOGOURTS-OUR REG PRICE 2.19 Mini Desserts s�o 125gti s 1.69 CATELLI-OUR REG PRICE 1.45 300gg 1.19 Lasagna BEEF CHICKEN, MUSHROOM Cordon Bleu Gravies 3:41.00 SAVE .50 GLAD, BONUS PACK OF 4 `FREE' Garbage Bags 99 pkg of 24 OUR REGULAR PRICE FOR 20-3.49 S00 pkgg 1.19 CATELLI OLD FASHIONED, GARLIC, HOT & SPICY OR MILD & SPICY Spaghetti Sauce 37.m1- ■99 SAVE .60 SPAGHETTI, READY CUT MACARONI, LINGUINE Catelli Pastas OUR REGULAR PRICE 1.59 `I kg pkg SAVE .20 A&P "IN OWN JUICE", CRUSHED, TIDBITS OR Sliced Pineapple 19floz tinF- OUR REGULAR PRICE .99 SUPER BUY! Canada Dry Beverages 5.99 Case of 24 - 10 oz. tins CRYSTAL SPRINGS Spring Water CASE OF 6-4 LITRE BTLS OUR REG PRICE 1.59 EACH amsofmmowsimeso BUY 6 SAVE 5.15 439 4 LITRE BTL .79 A&P, JAPANESE Mandarin Oranges 1011 oz tin ■6 OCEAN SPRAY, CRANAPPLE DRINK OR Cranberry Cocktail :XI 2.39 (BANDED PACK OF 2-140 g BATH SIZE BARS) OR Irish Spring Soap bang13pack bars 1.59 EVAPORATED Carnation Milk 385 mL tin in9 ASST VARIETIES INCL JU JUBES & SCOTCH MINTS Trebor Candy 200899 pkg ■ ASST FLAVOURS (PLUS .30 BTL DEPOSIT) Canada Dry Beverages 750 mL 49 btl ■ SUPER BUY! ASST VAR INCL WHOLE DILLS & SWEET MIXED Bick's Pickles 99 OUR REG 1 L PRICE UP TO jar 2.89 (Rick's Assorted Pickles 500 mL jar -1.89) 4 OUFEN'S PARK BY JACK RI DDELL, MPP The preservation of Ontario's agricultural land has long been a matter of concern to the Ontario Liberal Party. In the light of the Ministry of Agriculture's recent support for the ur- ban development of 4,000 acres of top quality foodland in the City of Brampton, the provincial government's commitment to the preservation of agricultural land is a farce and a sham, says. Liberal Leader David Peterson. On September 19, the Brampton City Council considered a staff report on changes to the proposed Bramtpon Official Plan. Council voted to designate agricultural land as "rural" rather than "agricultural" which would have more accurately reflected the predominant land use and intended future use. Rural, is a classification, is seen as nothing more than a holding category until the rural land is ready for development. Bramtpon Council also voted in favour of the urbanization of the 4,000 acre parcel of land which Ronto- Sandringham proposed to develop. No phasing criteria are to be established and the definition of the land to be developed has been left so general that any or all of the land can be developed at any time. The City's Official Plan must now be approved by the Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing, and the Association of People Evaluating Agricultural Land - who are opposing the urbanization - have asked that the Plan be referred to the Ontario Municipal Board for hearings. Virtually the only steps which the provincial government has taken to preserve agricultural land are ineffective foodland guidelines which are not binding upon municipalities. It thus remains economically more attractive for municipalities to approve industrial development over agricultural land preservation. A recent major federal government study reported the alarming disap- pearance of millions of acres of prime farmland in Ontario, especially in the ur- ban shadow. This controversial Brampton situation is a classic example of the continued destruction of valuable farmland. Brampton was well endowed with agricultural land, containing some 81.5 per cent Class 1 land. Only one-half of one per cent of Canada's land is in this category and approximately one-half of this small amount is in Southern Ontario. Between 1971 and 1982, Brampton lost some 16,000 acres of prime agricultural land and the trend continues. Brampton only has some 27,000 acres of farmland remaining. Last year, Liberals questioned the Minister of Agriculture and Food about the lack of comment by his ministry on the application of Foodland Guidelines to the Brampton Official Plan which included the urbanization of over 7,000 acres of agricultural land and which had been circulated to his ministry for comments in October 1980. After three years of stony silence, the ministry finally decided that the best way to preserve 4,000 acres of agricultural land, whose need for development has not been demonstrated, is to include it in the urban boundary and allow it to be phased in. The definition and time frame for the phasing was intentionally left vague. Surely a more logical means of preserving farmland is to keep it out of the urban limit. Especially in view of the fact that the only justification for the inclusion of the land for urbanization which had been excluded in the Draft Official Plan was as the result of a submission to Brampton Council by R.K. Webb, the former law partner of Premier Davis, on behalf of the Ronto-Sandringham Development Group. As a result of the inclusion of the lands, the original Official Plan population projection was revised upward from 260,000 to 344,000. As Liberal Leader David Peterson has pointed out, the Minister of Agriculture "is abrogating his responsibility when 4,000 acres of the best foodland is casually sacrificed to urban sprawl ... He condones the continued loss of the means with which to feed ourselves." If the Davis government is serious about the preservation of farmland in Ontario, it can start by preventing the further loss of prime agricultural land hi the premier's home riding.